Being found "not guilty" is not the same as being found "innocent". OJ Simpson is the perfect example.Now I hope they get prosecuted for perjury and sued for all they're worth, sent to the poorhouse their whole lives paying off the damages.
And in June, when he goes back on trial for sexual harassment of his female producer at CBC, he will be forced to testify. I believe then we will see more complete picture of who he is.Ghomeshi could not be forced to testify in the trial. In a civil trial Ghomeshi would almost certainly be forced to testify. He would be required to answer some uncomfortable questions ...
JD
Sorry Erica, but you are incorrect.And in June, when he goes back on trial for sexual harassment of his female producer at CBC, he will be forced to testify. I believe then we will see more complete picture of who he is.
*shrug* it happens, I hear! ;D There are always three sides in every trial; the prosecution's version, the defense's version, and the truth, which may resemble neither.Sorry Erica, but you are incorrect.
Nope. He won't have to testify. He only has to answer "how do you plead?" with "not guilty" and then sit back and let Marie Henein work. This is the trial that has some substance to it, not the 4 "chancers" shooting for fame and glory.And in June, when he goes back on trial for sexual harassment of his female producer at CBC, he will be forced to testify. I believe then we will see more complete picture of who he is.
someThere wont be any perjury charges.
A finding that your evidence is not credible is not a finding that you were lying. Proving perjury beyond a reasonable doubt is virtually impossible without objective evidence of the truth. That's clearly not the case here.
As for civil suits I'd be pretty amazed if anyone has the appetite or resources for those. It's easy to yell out "sue them" when you don't have to write the retainer cheque.
All sorts of leafs blowing in the wind. Here's a few. Jian Ghomeshi's facebook post. Lucy DeCoutere's 2010 "love email to Ghomehi" (it's referred to in the judgement). The over 5000 emails and texts that Lucy DeCoutere sent to her "posse" to encourage and direct the substance of their "complaints" and her expressed desire to "decimate" him.It's not clear to me what recourse she has against Ghomeshi for her sexual harassment charge?
She admits publicly that he didn't "assault" her (which could also be why she didn't sign on for the DeCoutere show).
Clearly she has a case against her former employer, or at least a human rights violation, but this must be a civil action against Ghomeshi rather than a criminal one (and he has his own defence given the lax application of workplace policies at CBC).
She's also admitted to some bizarre outside behaviour (ie, binge drinking) so, no doubt, she has to prepare herself to testify (even if he doesn't) and withstand a withering cross-examination from Marie Henein.
Given this all points back to the CBC, and given the disaster that the DeCoutere show turned out to be, this thing just screams Settlement to me.
Not saying the scumbag doesn't deserve to be punished, or that Borel doesn't have a very legitimate case to make. Just hard to see why anyone would want to go through with this, given it's in the past, she's moved on to California, and after witnessing the shit show that the actual assault trial turned into?
She left Toronto and got a new job in California writing for American Dad. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kathryn_Borel https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Dad!I don't understand your reasoning as to why this is an advantage for Kathryn Borel's complaint.
The issue in the previous trial was not that there was ongoing contact. The judge conceded that, while unusual, there might be a reasonable explanation. Victims of domestic violence & even those who date people prone to the occasional violent attacks do regularly continue in contact but the assaults are still valid. The major issue is that they failed to disclose the contact and, when confronted with their omission, they provided an unbelievable excuse for their omission. They were unreliable witnesses.
You state that Kathryn Borel apparently had no ongoing contact. If that is true, it won't hurt her credibility. If that is false & she disclosed it to the police (and presumably had a reasonable excuse because charges were still laid) then it likely won't harm her credibility either.
I used to work as a radio producer for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. A few months into my job in 2007, I let out a big yawn at a staff meeting and my host told me “I want to hate fuck you, to wake you up.” I was 27 years old. I made sure never to yawn in front of him again.
After that, there were the uninvited back massages at my desk to which it was clear I couldn’t say no, during which my host’s hands would slide down just a little too close to the tops of my breasts. A year into my time on the job, he grabbed my rear end and claimed he couldn’t control himself because of my skirt. Occasionally my host would stand in the doorway of his office when no one was around and slowly undo his shirt by two or three buttons while staring at me, grinning. He once grabbed my waist from behind – in front of our fellow colleague, at the office – and proceeded to repeatedly thrust his crotch into my backside. There was emotional abuse, too: gaslighting and psychological games that undermined my intelligence, security and sense of self. Sometimes that hit harder than the physical trespassing.
In 2010, I went to my union to try and find a way to end this pattern of sexual harassment by Jian Ghomeshi. I had no intention to sue, or to get him fired, or even to have him reprimanded. I just needed him to stop. The union representative and my executive producer at Q, the radio show for which we worked, did nothing.
In retrospect, I’m one of the lucky ones. Ghomeshi never tried to sexually assault or beat me in the three years I worked with him on Q. But last week, Toronto police charged him with four counts of sexual assault and one count of choking a woman. So far, anonymously and in the press, 15 women have made allegations against Ghomeshi of violent physical abuse.
A small part of me was shocked: not because I think he is innocent, but because when Ghomeshi was harassing me, it felt like the power dynamics of his fame – and those complicit in maintaining that fame – had inured my host to all consequences of his actions.
I went years without reporting the harassment because I feared for my job and my career: getting asked to be part of the original production team behind Q was the biggest break I’d ever had. It was my first permanent, full-time job. I had stability, many excellent colleagues and a dental plan. The show became a conspicuous success with a known celebrity at its helm. If I quit, where else was there to go?
And, like a lot of women, I worried that I had somehow brought Ghomeshi’s unrelenting advances upon myself. I went over my workdays when I got home: Had I been too fast and loose with jokes in the office? Was I intentionally provoking his come-ons by talking back to him?
By the time a friend convinced me to go to the union in early 2010, I was 25 pounds heavier, I was binge-drinking on the weekends, and I was missing days of work to stay home and lie in bed. Reporting what was going on to someone outside of the chain of command – someone who had perspective outside the hermetic environment of the show’s increasingly twisted culture – felt like my last hope.
My meeting with Timothy Neesam, an elected rep of the Canadian Media Guild, lasted about a 30 minutes. He didn’t take notes while I detailed the extent of Ghomeshi’s sexual comments and inappropriate physical contact. (In October 2014, he emailed me in response to my questions that he remembers us talking “about Jian behaving inappropriately (verbally/in attitude) toward you”. The next day he added, “I have no recollection of you telling me about physical touching” but that my complaint “was passed verbatim to the CBC radio manager, and also verbatim to the Q executive producer.”). After my somewhat frantic monologue, Neesam gave me two options: start a union arbitration, or file a formal grievance. But confronting Ghomeshi directly seemed like a nightmare. His star was rising fast. He was inextricable to the brand of the show. I worked behind the scenes and could be replaced at a moment’s notice. My feeling was that if it came down to firing the “problem employee”, Ghomeshi certainly wasn’t going to be the one whom the radio station let go.
By the time my union rep offered to informally talk to the executive producer of the show, Arif Noorani, I felt like I was trapped in a feedback loop: I had cried in my boss’s office already, on more than one occasion, because of Ghomeshi’s behaviour towards me. A couple of days later, Noorani called me in for a meeting, and told me that Ghomeshi was the way he was, and that I had to figure out how to cope with that.
I took a leave of absence shortly thereafter and went to Los Angeles, where I decided to build a new career. I submitted my letter of resignation to Q, moved south and tried to put Ghomeshi in my rearview.
I quoted your post because it was the next in the conversation. You thought that she may have had later contact, I was pointing out that she moved to the west coast and to another country to get away from his attention.I would say that sdw's second link provides the answer. Here is a small quote from that article:
She complains of being touched without consent (assaulted) in a sexual way on numerous occasions. Thus the charge of sexual assault.






